British actions in India and the North-West Frontier from the 1850s until the 1920s

Monday, 16 March 2015

Update on the 2nd Afghan War project

Well, one of the things I was worried about as regards the Artizan Designs figures was that the releases would dry up, as has happened to Artizan ranges before. This, however, does not seem to be the case with the North West Frontier; with a lot of new releases appearing lately. I managed to paint one each of the initial release of Afghan tribesmen. There haven't released any more of these but I do have some Studio Miniatures Afghans on the go too.

Next, I started work on the initial release of the British and Indian troops: Two packs of Sikhs and four packs of British. I stopped work on them for quite a few months as I wasn't convinced about the accuracy of the British troops' helmets, which seemed to be modelled on the appearance in 1898. Anyway, I filed off the 1898 style square flash on the helmet and decided to just get on with them. In the last week I have painted the base coats of the puttees and rifles of the Sikhs and got the base coats of the jackets, helmets, trousers, puttees and flesh of the sixteen British done. Still a long way to go but some more progress at last.

Corps of Guides

In the interim Artizan have released a host of new packs and this has got me painting again. For the Afghans there are three types of regular infantry but no officers as yet, so I will leave these for a bit. There is one new pack of (kneeling) Sikhs so I may get those sooner rather than later. The first of a planned six packs for the Corps of Guides has been released. I bought a pack of these and have now based and undercoated them. There is one issue with them in that their rifles are not modelled with straps (unlike the Sikhs) which makes their rifles rather thin and delicate. They are very easily bent so I will need to be careful with them. Actually, I discovered that yesterday two more packs of Guides have just been released! There are also two packs of Punjabi infantry now and a Sikh mountain gun and crew. Indian artillery crews were notably effective in the mountains.

For the British there have been four more packs of standard British infantry, including a bare headed set and a pack in poshteens plus a mountain gun and crew. In addition, there have been five packs of Highlanders in kilts and one pack in trews.

So that is twenty-two packs that have come out since I bought the initial release!

Encouraged by this flurry of new releases I have painted the first two officers for my first British unit. One is the North Star tea time figure and I have given him a rather floral Victorian cup and saucer based on a Victorian example I found on the internet. A present from the memsahib to enhance his Darjeeling!

The second officer is one from the initial Artizan Designs release. I have put both my officers in the standard blue home service trousers which some units wore at the beginning of the war. Partly, this is influenced by the old Esci Khyber Pass box which had the British (really just their Zulu War figures re-boxed with a few new Indian army figures) in blue trousers. I painted some of these many years ago and really liked the look of the blue trousers with the khaki jacket.

Mainly, however, I wanted my first unit to represent my local regiment: The 70th foot, the Surreys, who saw action in Afghanistan in 1879. There is an illustration of them in the transitional uniform (khaki jacket with blue home service trousers) in Afghanistan on the Queen's Royal Surrey Website. More on them when I finish my first batch of troops.

2 comments:

All excellent! I have also bought everything Artizan have released for their NWF range...and with The Men Who Would Be Kings being released in 2016 I might actually have them all ready! Oh...and I'm the first follower!!